BBC
BBC
Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos.
The Life Project

How the world has an unexpected ‘chance to reset’

Produced by Sebastián Díaz and Meredith Turits

This story is best experienced with sound.
Use headphones and turn up the volume

Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos.

Covid-19 has forced us to make major adjustments to how we think and thrive.

Surprisingly, some of these shifts have bettered us, and even offered hope for how we’ll go forward.

BBC Worklife asked people about positive changes they’ve experienced amid the crisis, and their hopes for the future.

Listen

Miranda Livingston, 34, UK
Project manager

“The pandemic and the lockdowns that swiftly followed have provided us all with a chance to jump off the life treadmill and take a breath, to ponder what our priorities are. Lockdown life is a simpler existence.”

Libby Sander, Australia
Assistant Professor of Organisational Behaviour, Bond University

“As a researcher in the workplace particularly, not having to go to the office has given me the chance to have some stillness – to be able to have time to think, and not take these things for granted. The fact that we think that’s boring is what Covid is really about: the chance to really reset.”

Listen

Larry Madowo, 33, US
North America correspondent, BBC News

“It’s allowed for us to collaborate across borders in ways we didn’t before. We filmed this one story in Atlanta, and worked on it in DC with colleagues plugging in from London. It was produced in LA, and eventually edited in Hong Kong. We had this capacity, but we just didn’t do it.”

Sagar Gahatraj, 28, Slovenia
Filmmaker

Sagar Ghataraj was always curious about growing his own food, but never had the time. But lockdown pushed him to do it.

“In the beginning, I worked in a small patch of land in my backyard, and planted some radish and spinach. As lockdown kept extending, I started planting many more varieties,” he says. “Soon, I started getting the harvest, which continued for the whole summer. It was a fantastic feeling.”

When he shared the vegetable garden with his friends and relatives, he was struck to find out that they were doing something similar. “Most of them were spending their quarantine doing something they wanted to do, but never had the time for. It was as if we were given time to stop and think about the most basic things in life.”

Listen

Carlosfelipe Pardo, 41, Colombia
Senior Advisor, New Urban Mobility Alliance

“I think the pandemic has shown us in transport that we can do less trips, and that many people can start doing their trips on a bicycle, or walking when they can. I also think that trips could have been a phone call or an email, and that travel can be much less. Hopefully, a lot of this can be taken up.”

Luzia Buchmann, 28, Sweden
Sustainability consultant

“This pandemic has challenged this society in so many ways, but it has also shown us how adaptive we are, and how quickly we can set things in motion when working toward the same goal. I hope that we are able to mitigate climate change in the same way. We all needed to change our behaviours to fight Covid, and I’m convinced we’ll be able to do the same for our planet.”

Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos.

“Video meetings allow us to see each other as whole persons... blending their professional with their private selves.” – Marcella Bremer, Netherlands

Listen

Devina Gupta, 34, India
Senior journalist and presenter, BBC World News

“Staying at my parents’ home during the lockdown was difficult initially, but with each meal we shared under the same roof, with each board game we played, with each cup of tea we had and all the dishes that we cleaned, my parents and I started opening up about our lives – and even our vulnerabilities.”

advertisement

advertisement

advertisement

Isaac Freeman, 22, Australia
Retail worker and photographer

As Isaac Freeman’s world has gotten “smaller and so much more confined” amid the pandemic, he’s found himself unexpectedly reinvigorated by his surroundings. “It has allowed me to appreciate more things about where I live, specifically nature and just the closeness of it all and the sense of community,” he says.

The beauty and wonder of his country has taken centre stage, and fuelled his hunger to learn more about it. 

“I’m looking forward to being able to travel a bit more within my own country, and being able to understand and appreciate the confines of it a lot more, because it may well be a very long time before we can travel internationally again.”

When we are able to move freely once more, Freeman hopes that people retain that sense of curiosity and appreciation for culture, art and sport, and keep cultivating the greater appreciation for all their surroundings can offer.

Helena Chmielewska-Szlajfer, 37, Poland
Assistant Professor, Kozminski University

“I’ve been rediscovering my own home country, and this has been a quite beautiful experience.”

Listen

Eva Nchogu, 36, Kenya
High school teacher

“Due to the pandemic, I was forced to install internet in my home, and [my daughter] now has broaden her perspective on the world.”

Winnie Nchogu, 30, Kenya
NGO finance officer

“I hope after the pandemic that society or our governments will pay more workers like the delivery workers, the public transport and even give them health good insurances because the pandemic has shown that they are really essential workers in our community and our society.”

Rob Briner, 58, UK
Professor of Organisational Psychology, Queen Mary University

London-based Rob Briner calls himself “a very keen cook – and, in fact, a very keen eater as well”. His pandemic silver lining has been discovering local suppliers of foodstuffs and ingredients. Briner has established his own “mini-supply chains”, and he appreciates the quality of the food he’s making more than ever.

His hopeful vision for the future is right in line with his own experience. Briner hopes there’s more emphasis on localism: creating and cultivating communities that people relish more, and that are nicer places to live.

“Perhaps we can make what’s immediately around us more acceptable, more meaningful, more pleasant,” he says.

Listen

Sandra Caballero, US
Shaping the Future of Mobility Specialist, World Economic Forum

“There’s such an opportunity to flesh out a whole conversation around equity. As this pandemic is truly global, we’ve seen who has been most impacted economically by Covid-19. Ironically, those most impacted are also the ones whom we most depend on.”

Greg Domino, 33, US
Director of communications

“We’ve experienced incredible work from those on the frontlines of this pandemic, and this awful moment in time will absolutely breed new innovation in the healthcare field. Keeping them healthy and working efficiently now and in the future should be our priority.”

Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos.

“Finally, I’ve got more time to clean up my place... and also clean up what I have inside my head about doubt and anxiety.” – Denis Pessin, 69, France

Phil Feinman, 34, US
Recording studio co-owner

In Los Angeles, Phil Feinman is among those who’ve found the newer, slower pace of life has given them an opening to learn something new. 

Feinman has used his time to certify in an unusual pursuit: amateur radio. He studied for and passed the US’s Federal Communications Commission licensing exam to receive his private identification. 

“I’ve been talking to people all over the world on amateur radio, and meeting people I never would have met prior to the pandemic,” he says. “It’s been great.”

Feinman is finding the globe even more open and connected than he did before – something he’s hoping that’ll carry through after the crisis is managed.

Listen

Leandro Gallo, 35, Argentina
Travel agent

“I discovered that work is one of the most important activities I do during the day, but not the most important activity. The important things are family, my [partner], my friends and even myself.”

Konstantinos Mpatakas, 36, Greece
Teacher

“We were isolated for quite a long time. We missed the contact with other people, face-to-face communication, touching each other, hugging our friends. In the future, I imagine people who will be closer and living life more united than ever.”

Stefanie Lis, 28, UK
Web developer

Stefanie Lis was working in hospitality when she found herself furloughed because of the pandemic. She went back to work when things began opening again in the UK over the summer, but it was stressful, she says. Lis wanted a change.

She found one. During her time on furlough, she learned to code online. She secured an internship that’s turned into a job as a web developer, enabling her to leave hospitality entirely. Now, she works safely from home  – “a blessing during this time”.

Still, although she’s among those enjoying working remotely, she hopes that people won’t want to stay inside their homes after the pandemic. “I think there’s been a trend lately of people wanting to stay home a lot… I think this will have changed a lot of people’s minds about that.”

Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos.

“Maybe it’s time to go after our dreams, since we realise how life can be short.” – Raja Skogland, 35, Norway

More from The Life Project

Has the meaning of work changed forever?

Why dating feels so different now

How 'slow streets' are changing cities

share this story

advertisement

advertisement

advertisement

Copyright © 2020 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more